BusinessMirror

Iran’s President Rouhani seeks to boost ties on first visit to Baghdad

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BAGHDAD—Iranian President Hassan Rouhani arrived in Baghdad on Monday, making his first official visit to the nation that Tehran once fought a bloody war against and later backed in the battle with the Islamic State group.

Since Rouhani’s election in 2013, Iraq has relied on Iranian paramilita­ry support to fight IS, following the militant group’s capture of the Iraqi city of Mosul and other territory in both Iraq and Syria.

Now with the militants facing a final territoria­l defeat in the Syrian village of Baghouz, Iran is looking for Iraq’s continued support as it faces a maximalist pressure campaign by President Donald J. Trump after his decision to withdraw America from Tehran’s nuclear deal with world powers.

Rouhani, who is accompanie­d on the three-day visit by a high-ranking political and economic delegation, was received by an honor guard on landing in Baghdad, where he was welcomed by Iraqi Foreign Minister Mohammed Ali Al-Hakim.

He proceeded for a stop at a Shiite shrine in the Iraqi capital and was then to meet with both President Barham Salih and Prime Minister Abdel Abdul Mehdi, as well as visit other politician­s and Shiite leaders.

Rouhani’s visit underscore­s how much has changed since the 1980s, when Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein invaded Iran, sparking an eight-year war that killed 1 million people. After the 2003 US-led invasion of Iraq toppled Saddam, Iran began a campaign of backing militants who targeted American forces in Iraq.

Tehran also made political connection­s with Iraq’s Shiite leaders, who had been persecuted by Saddam’s government. Iran’s former hardline President Mahmoud Ahmadineja­d became the first Iranian president to visit Iraq on a trip in 2008.

Iraq and Iran share a 1,400-kilometer-long (870 miles) border. Trump made a snap December trip to Iraq and made comments that US forces should stay in Iraq to keep an eye on Iran, something dismissed by both Iran and Iraqi leaders, whom Trump did not meet on the visit.

Speaking at Tehran’s Mehrabad Airport before leaving for Iraq, Rouhani’s official web site quoted him as saying the trip’s goal was “deepening bilateral relations.”

“Relations between Iran and Iraq are special,” Rouhani was quoted as saying. “In the recent years, the people of Iran have passed a test with pride, and that is wherever the peoples of the region faced a problem and asked for the help of the Iranian nation and government, we rushed to help them.”

Rouhani, who had visited Iraq privately before becoming president, had planned an official visit in 2016 but it was cancelled over unspecifie­d “executive” problems.

This time, Rouhani, who is on a second four-year term, is particular­ly vulnerable because of the economic crisis assailing the Iranian rial, which has hurt ordinary Iranians and emboldened critics to openly call for the president’s ouster.

Tehran sees the US military presence at its doorstep in Iraq as a threat—one that could also undermine Iran’s influence over Baghdad.

Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif alluded to that on Sunday while in Baghdad, saying that any country that tries to interfere with the good Iran-Iraq relations would “be deprived of opportunit­ies for itself.” Iran also sees Iraq as a possible route to bypass US sanctions that Trump reimposed last year after pulling the US out of the 2015 nuclear deal. AP

 ?? AP Photo/KhAlid MohAMMed ?? IraqI President Barham Salih, (right), shakes hands with visiting Iranian President Hassan rouhani at Salam Palace in Baghdad, Iraq, on Monday, March 11. rouhani arrived in Baghdad on Monday, making his first official visit to the nation that Tehran once fought a bloody war against.
AP Photo/KhAlid MohAMMed IraqI President Barham Salih, (right), shakes hands with visiting Iranian President Hassan rouhani at Salam Palace in Baghdad, Iraq, on Monday, March 11. rouhani arrived in Baghdad on Monday, making his first official visit to the nation that Tehran once fought a bloody war against.

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